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Effectiveness of a video-based motivational skills-building HIV risk-reduction intervention for inner-city African American men.
110
Citations
20
References
1999
Year
Digital InterventionHiv Risk BehaviorHarm ReductionSocial SciencesPsychologyHealth CommunicationPublic HealthPublic Health InterventionBehavioral SciencesHealth PromotionMotivationHiv RiskHeterosexual MenHivSexual BehaviorSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionHealth BehaviorPrevention Science
Interventions to reduce HIV risk behavior have shown promise but have demonstrated inconsistent effects with heterosexual men. This article reports a cognitive-behavioral HIV risk reduction intervention designed for heterosexually active African American men. Men (N = 117) recruited from a public clinic were randomly assigned to either (a) a 6-hr video-based small group motivational-skills intervention or (b) a 6-hr video-based contact-matched HIV education comparison group. Results showed men in the motivational-skills intervention reported lower rates of unprotected vaginal intercourse and higher rates of condom use at the 3-month follow-up. However, because of increased condom use in the comparison condition, differences between groups dissipated 6 months following the intervention. These findings are among the first to demonstrate effects from a motivational-skills intervention for reducing HIV risk in men who have sex with women using a model designed to facilitate transferring prevention technology to community settings.
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